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Chapter 19 - The Prophet of the Void

Tashi & Son Electronics

Commercial Avenue

Tuesday, July 13, 1999

​The air in the shop was thick with the scent of lavender oil and expensive cologne.

​Prophet Elijah did not walk; he floated. He was a man of immense proportions, dressed in a suit of shimmering white silk that seemed to repel the red dust of Bamenda by sheer willpower. His church, The Tabernacle of the Rising Fire, was the fastest-growing business in the North West.

​"So," the Prophet said, his voice a melodic baritone that had mesmerized thousands. "This is the boy. The one the market women call the Sun-Catcher."

​He looked at me with eyes that were sharp, greedy, and very, very intelligent. He didn't see a child; he saw a rival for the people's wonder.

​Tashi was bowing so low he was almost horizontal. "Yes, Papa Prophet! My son, Nkem. He is a humble servant of knowledge."

​"Knowledge is a dangerous thing, Mr. Tashi," Elijah warned, tapping his gold-tipped cane on our tiled floor. "The tower of Babel was built on knowledge. And look how that ended."

​< Psychological Profile: > Gemini noted. < Subject is a Narcissist with high situational awareness. He is not a believer; he is a CEO. He is threatened by the autonomy your technology provides. If people have their own light, they don't need to come to his 'Holy Fire' services during blackouts. >

​"I am not building a tower, Prophet," I said, stepping forward. "I am building a mirror."

​"A mirror?"

​"To reflect the light God already gave us," I said. "You tell the people that the new millennium is a time of darkness and judgment. I want to show them that it is a time of stewardship."

​I led him to the back room. I had prepared a demonstration.

​I had built a Solar-Powered Projection System. It was a crude thing a high-intensity LED array, a magnifying lens from Patel's shop, and a transparent slide I had hand-drawn.

​I flipped the switch. The room went dark, and a brilliant image appeared on the white-washed back wall. It was a cross, glowing in pure, cold white light.

​"You use kerosene lamps in your Tabernacle, Prophet," I said. "They smoke. They smell. They flicker. Imagine... a church that glows with the power of the heavens. Imagine a cross that never goes out, even when SONEL fails the whole city."

​Elijah stared at the glowing cross. I could see the gears in his head turning. He was calculating the "seed offerings" he could collect for a "Miraculous Light."

​"What do you want, boy?" Elijah asked, his voice losing its theatrical lilt.

​"The eclipse," I said. "On August 11th, the sun will go dark for a few minutes. The Bookman's people are already telling the market that I have brought a curse. They say the darkness is my fault."

​Elijah smiled. It was a cold, knowing smile. "And you want me to tell them it is a sign of blessing? That the darkness is just a 'pause' for God to recharge your batteries?"

​"Exactly. In exchange, I will electrify your Tabernacle. For free. You will be the only Prophet in Cameroon with a sun-powered altar."

​Elijah looked at Tashi, who was sweating. He looked at the glowing cross.

​"You are a devilish little businessman," Elijah whispered. "I like you. But I want more. I want the 'Zombie Lights' for my deacons. Fifty of them."

​"Twenty," I countered. "And you must publicly bless Tashi as a 'Steward of the Light' this Sunday."

​"Thirty lights," Elijah said. "And the blessing will be... significant."

​"Deal."

​While I was negotiating with the heavens, Collins was dealing with the earth.

​I found him behind the shop after the Prophet left. He wasn't alone. He was sitting with three other boys Bih, a girl who sold peanuts, and two "truck-pushers" named Sunday and Pauly.

​They were looking at a map of the Commercial Avenue I had drawn for them.

​"Massa Nkem," Collins said, standing up. "Razor no dey hide again. He get new boss. No be just Bookman. I see a man for 'The Spot' bar. He wear suit. He talk French. He come from Yaoundé."

​< Intelligence Update: > Gemini pulsed. < The Yaoundé connection. This is the 'Bureau Man' you suspected. The political intelligence officer. >

​"Weti they di do, Collins?" I asked.

​"They di buy all the kerosene," Collins said. "Every drum for the market. Razor and yi boys, they buy everything. Now, kerosene price don double. People di cry."

​I looked at the sky. The Bookman was creating an artificial energy crisis. If he controlled the kerosene, and the sun "died" during the eclipse, he would own the town's survival.

​"Collins," I said. "You sabi the old warehouse for the Station Road?"

​"The one wey don lock since?"

​"Yes. I want you to watch it. Don't go near. Just count how many drums go in. And tell me if you see the Bureau Man there."

​Collins nodded, his face hardening. He was learning that "Security" wasn't just about fighting; it was about watching. He was growing out of his "market boy" skin and becoming a scout.

​That night, for the first time, Liyen didn't bring food to the shop. She made us come home.

​We sat in our small parlor. The "Zombie Light" I had made for her was on the table, but she hadn't turned it on. She had lit a single, smoky kerosene candle instead.

​"Mami, why the candle?" Tashi asked, reaching for the switch. "We have the good light."

​"No," Liyen said. Her voice was quiet, but it had a new edge. "Tonight, we use the candle. I want to remember what it feels like to be poor."

​Tashi laughed nervously. "We are not poor anymore, Liyen! We have the shop! We have the Gendarmerie!"

​"We have a target on our back," Liyen said, looking at him. "Tashi, you walk like a lion, but you are still a sheep. You think the Prophet is your friend? You think the Colonel loves you? They love the boy's head. They don't love us."

​She looked at me.

​"Nkem. You are building things. Lights. Radios. Now 'Juju' for the Pastor. But you are not playing. You don't laugh anymore. You don't even eat like a child."

​She stood up and walked to the wall where her old sewing machine sat.

​"I am going back to the market," she announced.

​"What?" Tashi jumped up. "No! People will talk! 'Why is the wife of Tashi selling dresses when the husband is a big man?'"

​"I don't care about your 'big man' talk," Liyen said. "I am a seamstress. I want to earn my own money. Money that doesn't come from a dream or a bet. I want to buy my own cloth. And I want Nkem to build me something."

​I looked up. "What, Ma?"

​"A motor," she said. "For my machine. I am tired of treading with my feet. If you can give light to a village, you can give power to your mother's hands."

​< Character Evolution: > Gemini noted. < Liyen is asserting her agency. She is refusing to be a passive observer of your 'uplift'. She wants to participate in the modernization, but on her terms. >

​I felt a surge of genuine warmth—not from Gemini, but from me.

​"I will build it, Ma," I said. "Tomorrow."

​"Good," she said, finally turning on the Zombie Light. "Now eat. The fufu is getting cold."

​As I ate, I realized the pieces were moving.

​Tashi was becoming the face.

Collins was becoming the eyes.

Liyen was becoming the anchor.

Simon Fru was the shield.

Uncle Lucas was the sword.

​We were no longer a family. We were an Organization.

​But out in the dark, the Bookman and the Bureau Man were consolidating the kerosene. They were preparing for the day the sun would fail.

​"Gemini," I thought as I lay on my mat that night. "How do we stop a kerosene monopoly?"

​< We don't stop it, > Gemini replied. < We make it irrelevant. We need to build a 'Solar Fridge'. >

​"A fridge? In 1999?"

​< If we can keep the vaccines and the food cold during the 'Darkness', the Bookman's kerosene will be worthless. But for that, we need a compressor. >

​I closed my eyes. Tomorrow, I would go to the scrap yard. I had a sewing machine to automate and a cooling system to invent.

​The millennium was 170 days away.

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